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Dan Maynard

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Everything posted by Dan Maynard

  1. I believe if the tree dies naturally you still have a duty to replant, so I'd definitely check with the council. We have had this discussion before, is cutting up a fallen tree works to a TPO tree or not? It's not dead yet, probably still carry on growing but the amenity value is clearly affected. In practical terms it needs moving off the driveway obviously.
  2. Yes viton is what we used to put in pharmaceutical jobs as better chemical resistance, or silicone rubber. Also in that case to do with alcohol resistance and subsequent not leaching chemicals back out.
  3. I guess as you move it back towards where it started you're getting more roots back in the ground. I reckon there's a happy medium which involves a stout length of oak trunk to hold it up, that would also stop it blowing back down.
  4. https://simplybearings.co.uk/shop/p80406/1mm-Section-3mm-Bore-NITRILE-70-Shore-Rubber-O-Rings/product_info.html These would be a standard, you might want to investigate materials for ethanol fuel, or might find a softer shore in something like silicone rubber. Bit of trial and error.
  5. It's a while but I used to do some mechanical design. Measuring the groove rather than the Oring is wise, there's a standard to fit bores and another for shafts. You should need a 5mm diameter, 1mm thick ring. This will compress slightly between the 3.2 and 5 (groove depth 0.9) but not fill the groove sideways.
  6. Business as in not for your own personal use. If you're not vat registered business you're supposed to pay the vat and enjoy it.
  7. Does it have a fancy end at the carb? I replaced cables on my JoBeau chipper for the drive control but these are just clamped, so I was able to buy tandem bike brake cables from a cycle shop. I would think the throttle cable is an engine accessory so might have more luck if you work out what the engine is and look for videos for that.
  8. Maybe one other thing, there is an ISA qualification route (International Society of Arboriculture), seems to be a good grounding for working in tree surgery but not thought of as so academic, so not usually leading on towards surveying if that's really what you want to do.
  9. Surveyors that I have had documents from seem to tend to have Tech Cert (ArborA) which is seems to be described as Level 4. I'm not really aware of anything except level 2, 4, 6 :- 2 is ground knowledge, 4 detailed, 6 degree level. You will probably know a lot of what's in 2 already. There are a couple of places which do level 2 as correspondence course, it is time consuming and can be difficult to self motivate and maintain progress (didn't get far in mine). Otherwise you can do local college course if you can find one, or go to specialist trainers like Tree Life. Tree Life | Training and Consultancy Services | Leicestershire | Online courses WWW.TREELIFEAC.CO.UK Tree Life focuses on providing specialist training for those candidates who are studying towards attaining SEG qualifications in Arboriculture at Certificate and Diploma levels...
  10. The front bar with handle in the stein arb trolley is only in on a pin, so you can swap it out for a drawbar with hitch. Don't know if the one at work was an option or bought elsewhere, but it's only a bit of box section with hitch so not difficult to arrange either way.
  11. @billpierce @MattyF thank you for these, I'm quite sold on the idea but started off down the rabbit hole of splicing as most people seem to sell just the block - looks like I can get it with ultra sling spliced on from Honeys though so seems like the way to go.
  12. Thing with an arb trolley, you can put a lot of weight on but then it's a lot of work to pull. I've done some jobs where we pulled the trolley round with a quad bike, absolutely brilliant and moved a lot of wood like that. I haven't bought one myself, I think £2k spent on a muck truck is better investment. If you have the business use, mini loader is the way to go.
  13. Cherry also warps and splits like a bstard as it dries. I'm still backing cherry.
  14. The place near me used to rent out a 360 and 460, and they kept the teeth pretty sharp. I'd take the 460 every time I could even though a few quid more to hire, the extra weight of machine and extra power means it takes a lot less effort to grind, and the self drive is brilliant on slopes, or on and off the trailer. It is a fair bit longer than the 360 though so access can be a problem. I always say the only reason a bigger grinder is not better is if it won't fit in the garden to get to the stump. Sadly they stopped hiring it out and just had the 360 so I bought my own cheap one I can put sharp teeth on.
  15. I'm intrigued by these, or thinking a pair of rings on ultra sling as looking for something bigger than 10mm in rigging wrench setup. What size rope do you use the block with, and does it normally go through once or through both and then you need to keep changing over? Seems like having to go up and pull the rope back through would be a bit of a faff but maybe you never really do?
  16. Not sure bots experience disappointment as such...
  17. Was on Nokia up to the 8 I had, was a nice phone. Currently on Ulefone - cheap and tough, can drop it out of a tree without breaking, bit slow and camera not great. Wouldn't be big enough for you.
  18. Seems like the Shizll is hard to find now though - anyone heard they've gone out of business or know why discontinued?
  19. Actually for light and easy to carry I have a Shizll spider sling in my climbing kit, rigging ring at the top is worth between half and one turn on a bollard. Also have a 10mm rope, rigging wrench and whoopie sling in a bag. Light and quick to set up. As I live in the land of small trees no need for bollard most of the time.
  20. I think America is a weird mixture , I've worked in only two factories in the US, both pharma, both were basically metric. All product drawings, machinery, tools.
  21. Tree Runner Rigging Bollard P 500 Kit WWW.CHRISFORESTRY.CO.UK Small and very stable bollard with a payload of 500 kg. The abseiling brake is suitable for ropes up to... Worth the extra hundred over a portawrap, I get help by people who are more casual labour quite a bit and this is super easy to use and control. Nice and stable, and not a big bit of kit in the van. My opinion anyway.
  22. DUN500W yes. I've done a couple of bay, a privet, trimmed wisteria with mine in the last week so I find it really useful - but it wouldn't be any good as an only trimmer as it won't do the heavier stuff. 23mm might be the spec because it's the gap between blades but it doesn't have the power to cut that thickness.
  23. The big old ones were sometimes. Id go elm too.
  24. Doesn't sound like a good tool to me.

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